South Pacific (Moon Handbooks S.)
by David Stanley
For more than 30 years, the award-winning Moon Handbooks series has been the top choice among independent travellers who want a unique experience, a new perspective, and a few new stories to tell. With Moon Handbooks, travellers are given the tools to make their own choices and create a travel strategy that's theirs alone. The result? A more personal and ultimately more satisfying travel experience. From lagoon swimming in the Cook Islands to witnessing the race of the banana bearers in the Heiva i Tahiti festival, travelers will find the best of the South Pacific, both popular and obscure, in this guidebook. Moon Handbooks South Pacific provides in-depth coverage of outdoor recreation, with specifics on swimming, diving, yachting, kayaking, biking, hiking, camping, climbing, caving, and horseback riding. Complete with useful advice on practicalities such as food, entertainment, shopping, visas, money, health, packing, and inter-island travel, travelers will find the tools they need for a uniquely personal experience in this guidebook.
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Relaxation Reading
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Tourism in the Pacific
by David Stanley
Tourism is the largest industry in many Pacific island countries. Yet mass
packaged tourism can be a double-edged sword
Tourism is the world's largest and fastest-growing industry, accounting
for 10 percent of world economic activity and one in 15 jobs worldwide.
Some 750 million people a year currently travel abroad compared to only 25
million in 1950, and each year over 100 million first-world tourists visit
developing countries, transferring billions of dollars from North to
South. Tourism is the only industry that allows a net flow of wealth from
richer to poorer countries, and in the islands it's one of the few avenues
open for economic development, providing much-needed foreign exchange
required to pay for imports. Unlike every other export, purchasers of
tourism products pay their own transportation costs to the market.
Australia provides the largest percentage of the one million plus tourists
who visit the South Pacific islands each year, followed by the United
States, New Zealand, France, Japan, the United Kingdom, Canada, and
Germany in that order. It's the number-one industry in French Polynesia,
Easter Island, the Cook Islands, Tonga, Samoa, Fiji, and Vanuatu, and some
50,000 islanders now rely on tourism as a way of making a living. Yet
tourism is relatively low key: overcrowded Hawaii gets 10 times as many
annual visitors as the entire South Pacific combined. The "tyranny of
distance" has thus far prevented the islands from being spoiled.
Only about 40 percent of the net earnings from tourism actually stays in
the host country. The rest is "leaked" in repatriated profits, salaries
for expatriates, commissions, imported goods, food, fuel, etc. Top
management positions usually go to foreigners, with local residents
offered low-paying service jobs. To encourage hotel construction, local
governments must commit to crippling tax concessions and large
infrastructure investments for the benefit of hotel companies. The cost of
airports, roads, communications networks, power lines, sewers, and waste
disposal can exceed the profits from tourism.
Tourism-related construction can cause unsightly beach erosion due to the
clearing of vegetation and the extraction of sand. Resort sewage causes
lagoon pollution, while the reefs are blasted to provide passes for
tourist craft and stripped of corals or shells by visitors. Locally scarce
water supplies are diverted to hotels, and foods such as fruit and fish
can be priced beyond the reach of local residents. Access to the ocean can
be blocked by wall-to-wall resorts.
Although tourism is often seen as a way of experiencing other cultures, it
can undermine those same cultures. Traditional dances and ceremonies are
shortened or changed to fit into tourist schedules, and mock celebrations
are held out of season and context, and their significance is lost. Cheap
mass-produced handicrafts are made to satisfy the expectations of
visitors; thus, the New Guinea-style masks of Fiji, mock-Hawaiian tikis of
Tonga, and Balinese carvings of Bora Bora. Authenticity is sacrificed for
immediate profits. While travel cannot help but improve international
understanding, the aura of glamour and prosperity surrounding tourist
resorts can present a totally false image of a country's social and
economic realities.
Foreign tour operators usually focus on luxury resorts and all-inclusive
tours--the exotic rather than the authentic. Packaged holidays create the
illusion of adventure while avoiding all risks and individualized
variables, and on many tours the only islanders seen are maids and
bartenders. This elitist tourism perpetuates the colonial master-servant
relationship as condescending foreigners instill a feeling of inferiority
in local residents and workers. Many island governments are publicly on
record as favoring development based on local resources and island
technology, yet inexplicably this concept is rarely applied to tourism.
Without local participation, tourism can be the proverbial wolf in sheep's
clothing.
About the author
David Stanley is the author of Moon Handbooks South Pacific, Moon Fiji,
and Moon Tahiti, published by Avalon Travel of Berkeley, California. His
personal website is .
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Moon Handbooks Fiji
by David Stanley
South Pacific expert and veteran travel writer David Stanley knows the best way to experience Fiji, from making waves at one of the world’s
premiere diving spots to getting away from it all in lesser-known villages. Stanley provides great trip ideas like Best of Fiji, Island-Hopping,
and Diving in Fiji. Packed with information on dining, transportation, and accommodations, Moon Fiji has lots of options for a range of travel
budgets.
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